This is likely my only shot. Assuming I get to see the Stones at Summerfest, it may well be the one opportunity left to see a legendary band Iâ€™ve never experienced live before, despite having been a fan since I was a kid.

Here, then, are the 10 songs (in no particular order) Iâ€™d love to hear the Stones play on June 23 at the Marcus Amphitheater, regardless of whether or not any of them is likely...

"Get Off My Cloud"

One of the best moments in rock and roll. As a drummer, I want to see Charlie do this one.

"Dead Flowers"

This one seems like a gimmie since the Stones are expected to play "Sticky Fingers" in its entirety.

"Memory Motel"

A sappy, long-time favorite from "Black and Blue," the first Stones record I can remember being released and the first one I devoured, along with the "Hot Rocks" comps.

"Out of Time"

Two reasons: itâ€™s a brilliant song and, secondly, because it would surely start a discussion about the experience itself.

"King Bee"

Down and dirty Slim Harpo cover from the first record.

"Far Away Eyes"

Hearing the b-side to "Miss You" will make me feel 12 all over again and remind me of plugging coins into the jukebox in the Pizza Hut in Glens Falls, N.Y. to play it.

"Wild Horses"

Keith's love song to his infant son â€“ and Mick's to Marianne Faithfull â€“ is one of my all-time favorites. See "Dead Flowers."

"Sheâ€™s a Rainbow"

This send-up of, or tribute to, psychedelia is one of the bandâ€™s most alluring compositions, whether or not John Lennon was right that it was an attempt to copy "All You Need Is Love."

"Happy"

Gotta hear Keef belt out at least one, and this is surely the best.

"Honky Tonk Woman"

Because I canâ€™t imagine a more rock and roll experience than the Stones playing "Honky Tonk Woman" ... even when theyâ€™re in their 70s.

Which Stones tunes are on your wish list for what could very well be the last time the band plays Milwaukee? Post them using the talkback feature below or via Facebook.

More Tosa restaurant news has emerged today: The family-owned Dickey's Barbecue Pit will open its 500th restaurant on Thursday, April 2. The new eatery is located in the Lowe's outlot at 3180 N. 124th St., at Burleigh.

The Dallas-based franchise chain's chairman, Roland Dickey, Sr., will be at the restaurant on Friday to mark the opening and to give away copies of his book, "Mr. Dickey's Barbecue Cookbook."

"It's hard to believe the one-room barbecue joint my grandfather founded is now a national chain with 500 locations," said Dickey in a news release. "I'm so proud of what our team has accomplished in building our brand to where we are today."

The chain, which offers free kids meals on Sundays, has been namedÂ "Top 10 Growth Chain" by Nation's Restaurant News three years in a row. Technomic called it the "Fastest-growing restaurant chain in the country."

"We're thrilled to be the 500th location and have Mr. Dickey at the celebration," said local franchise owner, Sherri Povolo in a statement. "My family loves being part of the Dickey's Barbecue brand and serving authentic barbecue throughout Wisconsin."

The first 50 dine-in guests on Thursday will get gift cards ranging from $5 to $50. On Friday there will be $2 pulled pork sandwiches and a range of giveaways. More giveaways follow on Saturday.

Every day, I drive along the northern border of the Haymarket neighborhood and I wonder why it's so neglected. Sure, there's activity there (see below) â€“ the neighborhood is hardly a secret â€“ but it seems ripe for so much more.

Since the Park East freeway spur no longer slices it off from Downtown, Haymarket can be a vibrant bridge not only between Downtown and Bronzeville but also between those areas and the booming (former Pabst) Brewery complex and Brewers Hill, too.

The neighborhood is adjacent to Schlitz Park, which edges closer and closer to full occupancy. On King Drive, in Haymarket, are the Park East Enterprise Lofts. There's a new park and bank branch along McKinley Boulevard, across from National Ace Hardware, the city's best hardware store. Bartolotta Restaurants is headquartered in the neighborhood and so is Miller Bakery.

Across the Park East is the Aloft Hotel and the Moderne residential tower. There's new development on the western edge, including a new $21 million Sojourner Family Peace Center building going up across 6th Street in Hillside at Walnut.

Across Walnut, in Bronzeville, there's a new development on tap for the old Garfield Avenue School.

In all of the discussions of the siting of a new arena for the Milwaukee Bucks, the discussion has been about connecting to Wisconsin Avenue and points south of the current Bradley Center, or to the river. But, let's not ignore the other side.

A new arena on the land north of the Bradley Center â€“ which appears to be the favored location now â€“and a range of related mixed-use developments in the Park East corridor could cause development in Haymarket to go, well, haywire.

There's some amazing vintage building stock that could be transformed and there are a number of vacant sites â€“ mostly surface parking lots â€“ that would appear ripe for construction. Look at the satellite view in Google Maps and Haymarket land looks more empty than not. Much like the Third Ward, not all that long ago, th…

Old newspaper ads for Milwaukee clubs open a world of unwritten history.

In the 1961 collection we see above, there's info about a My Office on Muskego Avenue, not to be confused with the one still open Downtown, where you could hear Sonny Kraft's Country Gentlemen and "western and roll 'n' roll music" by Ed Porter.

There was also a Celebrity Club on 12th Street, just south of Walnut in Bronzeville, where singer and pianist Mary Reed was accompanied by bassist Bill Jordan, who my friend College Dave remembers later as the owner of Mayfield's.

In other "doppelganger" bar news, there was also a place called The Tonic at 900 S. 16th St. Like the eponymous place in Bay View today, the old Tonic hosted live music.

I'm intrigued by Maynard's Wagon Wheel, which had country music by Sonny Williams and His Band â€“ playing covers, it seems â€“ and Valenti's Blue Ridge Lounge's Hawaiian musical weekend. Both those sites are now vacant. Same is true for the site of Mr. Kelly's on Juneau (previously known as the Diplomat Musical Lounge), which hosted jazz, just like the Driftwood Lounge on Capitol Drive, across from WTMJ, did.

The Gay 90's on 5th and Michigan was keeping vaudeville alive with "song," "fun" and "music" and A place at "2358 N. (Upper) 3rd St.," called Greg Logan's Cocktail Room, hosted "Tom and Jerrys' Flaming Blue Blazers."

But what caught my eye most of all was the Pink Poodle on Highway 100 and Beloit Road. Who would expect to a find a pink poodle, real or imagined, all the way out there?

But the Pink Poodle must've been the place to be if Chubby Neiland was playing there.

Neiland was described in 1953 as "the behemoth organist at the Five O'Clock Club," in a Sentinel tidbit that recounted this episode:

"(Neiland) was spotted eating one of those huge steaks in a local eatery. A friend passed by and looked at the enormous steak and remarked, 'Surely you're not going to eat that alone, are you?' Without looking up from the meat platter, Chubby replied p…